Michigan
Blitz-heavy DC Martindale vows to ‘find the right mix’ at Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — They may share the same first name, role on the Michigan football coaching staff and desire to blitz.
But new Wolverines defensive coordinator Don “Wink” Martindale has done his best this offseason to quiet the skeptics who suggest he’s just another polished, more successful version of Don Brown.
“It’s ridiculous,” Martindale told reporters Tuesday ahead of training camp. “As I see it, it’s ridiculous. You have defenses that are ranked No. 1 in the NFL, in the top 5 three years in a row, and you come into a new system in New York and you go into the playoffs and what do they want to talk about?
“All they want to talk about is last year, the last year (in Baltimore).”
Martindale was referencing his 2021 season with the Ravens, the low-point of his career as a coordinator in the NFL. Not only did Baltimore fall to 19th in yards allowed per play that season, but did so blitzing at an uncomfortable 31.1 percent rate. Uncomfortable for Martindale, anyway.
In four of his seven seasons as an NFL coordinator, Martindale-led defenses were No. 1 in blitz rates — including three of his four seasons in Baltimore, where the Ravens chased after the quarterback on 39.6 percent of dropbacks in 2018, 54.9 percent in ‘19 and 44.1 percent in ‘20. It wasn’t until his final season, after which head coach John Harbaugh elected to move on from the longtime assistant coach, that he let off the gas.
More: Martindale reassures U-M players upon arrival: ‘I’m the OG of of this system’
“Am I an aggressive playcaller? Yes, I’m an aggressive playcaller,” Martindale, tasked with taking over the No. 1-ranked Michigan defense, conceded. “We’ve won a lot of football games calling games aggressively. When it doesn’t work, that’s when everybody comes out and says, ‘He’s blitzing too much.’ You don’t hear that at all when you win. You hear about how creative you are.”
The task this fall for Martindale, 61, who inked a massive three-year, $7.5 million contract to take over for the departed Jesse Minter. Martindale knows the Michigan defense well for someone who’s been absent from the college ranks for more than two decades; he helped build it in Baltimore, where Michigan’s two previous coordinators (Minter, Mike Macdonald) learned under him.
But the Michigan fanbase still has flashbacks to the Don Brown era circa 2016 to 2020, when the Wolverines owned top-10 defenses through a healthy dose of blitzing that never seemed to work against high-powered offenses. The approach eventually fell apart in 2020 and Brown was dismissed from his post.
His successors, Macdonald and Minter, installed and adapted the Ravens’ scheme in Ann Arbor to the modern complexities of college football, where no-huddle, fast, pass-heavy offenses rule the land. To be successful, it is imperative that a unit be mendable in order to get off the field in a timely fashion. And they did, to great success. Minter was lauded for masterfully mixing up fronts, working in zone coverages on the back end and simulating blitzes to confuse opposing offenses.
Martindale, speaking Tuesday, said he believes in a healthy balance of both — man-coverage from the outside corners, a unit that includes All-American Will Johnson, and safeties who do it all — including bull-rushing the quarterback.
“When you start out teaching the principle of man (coverage), which we’ll do in the first practice, you can play zone to win games,” Martindale said. “Zone teams that play nothing but zone can never play man to win the game. Teams that don’t pressure when they have to pressure, it don’t usually look right because they don’t practice it enough.
“If they know that you’re just going to be a four-man rush coverage team, you don’t have a very high success rate.”
Michigan defensive coordinator Wink Martindale watches during the NCAA college football team’s spring game in Ann Arbor, Mich., Saturday, April 20, 2024. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)AP
During an appearance on the “GM Shuffle” podcast with former NFL general manager Michael Lombardi earlier this summer, Martindale described his defense as “flexible,” “player-friendly” and “position-less football” while acknowledging the different nuances in the college game.
“There’s more simulated pressures that you see watching tape that work just as effectively as sending them all,” Martindale told the podcast. “I think it’s going to be a wait-and-see as we get through fall camp and everything else, but let’s make no mistake about it: I’m more aggressive than probably both of those guys (Macdonald, Minter) — sometimes to a fault.”
Helping matters, Martindale will be armed with a healthy dose of elite playmakers and experience on all three levels of the defense. Defensive tackle Mason Graham is a preseason All-American while his tackle partner, Kenneth Grant, is among one of the best in the Big Ten. Edge rushers Joasiah Stewart and Derrick Moore both saw extended playing time during the Wolverines’ national title run last year. Linebackers Ernest Hausmann and Jaishawn Barham both started games at their previous stops. Throw in Johnson, returning safety Makari Paige and a group of four transfer defensive backs with starting experience elsewhere and Michigan has the needed depth to make it work on the back end.
The situation is primed for Martindale to succeed, even as Michigan is set to play a difficult schedule in the expanded Big Ten. He’s chosen to keep the four “pillars,” or points of emphasis with the players — block destruction, effort, ball disruption and communication — in an effort to boost turnover numbers.
“We’ll find the right mix of pressure and simulated (blitzes) and all that,” Martindale said Tuesday. “We’ll find the right mix. That’s what training camp is for.”
Michigan
No. 8 Michigan State beats Rutgers 91-87 before closing regular season at No. 3 Michigan
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Jeremy Fears had 21 points and eight assists and Coen Carr also scored 21, helping No. 8 Michigan State hold off Rutgers 91-87 on Thursday night.
The Spartans (25-5, 15-4 Big Ten) will close the regular season on the road against rival and third-ranked Michigan on Sunday.
Michigan State has won five straight games to secure a top-four seed in next week’s Big Ten Tournament and a double-bye into the quarterfinals.
The Scarlet Knights (12-18, 5-14) have slumped toward the bottom of the 18-team conference.
Rutgers’ Tariq Francis scored 25 points, Lino Mark had 14 and Emmanuel Ogbole added 13.
Michigan State trailed by a point at halftime and took control with an 11-0 run. Carr dunked three times in 1:13 and Jordan Scott followed with a slam 32 seconds later.
The Spartans had a comfortable cushion until the final minute, when their 10-point lead was trimmed to two. Fears sealed the win with two free throws with 2.9 seconds left.
Jaxon Kohler scored 15 points and Carson Cooper added 14 in the final home game for both seniors.
Michigan State celebrated its seniors after the game, including Nick Sanders, son of Hall of Fame running back Barry Sanders of the Detroit Lions.
The school honored a military veteran, as it does every game before the national anthem is played, and the latest was Kohler’s 102-year-old great grandfather, Earl “Chuck” Kohler, who served in the Navy and is one of 12 remaining survivors of the Pearl Harbor attack.
Up next
Rutgers: Host Penn State on Sunday.
Michigan State: At No. 3 Michigan on Sunday.
___
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Michigan
Michigan to distribute marijuana tax revenue: What your city will get
2025 MI marijuana excise tax revenues drop for local governments
In 2025, local government retail license share dropped $4,211 from Michigan marijuana sales for the tax year. New taxes could cut it more in 2026.
Michigan municipalities and counties that allow recreational marijuana dispensaries are set to receive far less money this year than last in their annual portion of tax revenue collected from cannabis sales.
Sales declined in 2025 for the first time since legal recreational marijuana sales started in December 2019.
A total of 114 cities, 39 villages, 81 townships, 75 counties and four tribes will receive payments from the Marijuana Regulation Fund, according to a March 3 news release from Michigan’s Cannabis Regulatory Agency. They will get about $54,000 per retail store or microbusiness, based on nearly $94 million collected.
Last year, each eligible government entity received a little more than $58,000 per business based on a total of nearly $100 million in marijuana tax revenue.
Detroit, once again, will receive the most money of any municipality. There are 61 active retailer licenses in Detroit, so the city will get nearly $3.3 million in tax revenue.
State law determines how the money is split. The Michigan Transportation Fund gets 35% of the revenue, which is used for the repair and maintenance of roads and bridges, and another 35% goes to the School Aid Fund to be used for K-12 education. The other 30% is split between municipalities, counties and tribes.
The payments come from revenue collected from the 10% recreational marijuana excise tax. This tax is separate from a new 24% wholesale tax that went into effect Jan. 1. The revenue from that tax will go to fixes for local roads.
Sales at recreational marijuana dispensaries declined by 3% last year to $3.17 billion, down from $3.28 billion in 2024, according to figures from Michigan’s Cannabis Regulatory Agency, leading to the smaller payouts. More government entities also split the revenue compared with last year.
Payments to municipalities could get smaller if sales continue to decline. Recreational marijuana sales in Michigan plunged nearly 16% in January compared with December as heavy snow, cold temperatures and fears of higher prices due to the new 24% wholesale cannabis tax kept consumers at home.
While recent trends indicate a cooling period, a February report from Headset, a cannabis market intelligence firm, said the market — one of the largest in the country — has shown resilience over the last two years.
Below are the municipalities that received the most tax revenue:
- Detroit: $3.3 million
- Grand Rapids: $1.5 million
- Lansing: $1.4 million
- Ann Arbor: $1.2 million
- Kalamazoo: $1 million
- Flint: $648,000
- Traverse City, Hazel Park and Adrian all will receive $594,000.
For a full list of municipalities, counties and tribes that will receive marijuana tax revenue, go to www.michigan.gov/treasury.
Contact Adrienne Roberts: amroberts@freepress.com
Michigan
“Trustworthy” AI consortium focused on ethics, security launches in West Michigan
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping everything from classroom conversations to social media, and leaders at Grand Valley State University (GVSU) say West Michigan is positioning itself to help determine how the technology is used, responsibly.
The university’s College of Computing is launching the West Michigan Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence (AI) Consortium, aimed at helping businesses, researchers and the community better understand how to use artificial intelligence.
Right in the heart of Grand Rapids, along the Medical Mile, the consortium will meet at the Daniel and Pamella DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health (DCIH) every week, with quarterly meetings open to the general public.
The effort is aimed at helping West Michigan industries adopt AI that fits their specific needs, while problem-solving for security, bias, privacy, and ethical concerns.
Right in the heart of Grand Rapids, along Medical Mile, the consortium will meet at the Daniel and Pamella DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health (DCIH) every week, with quarterly meetings open to the general public. (Abigail Taylor/WWMT)
Marouane Kessentini, Ph.D, Dean of the GVSU College of Computing told News Channel 3 that a wide range of companies in the region are bringing forward questions of where, and how, to ethically integrate artificial intelligence into their practices.
“Here in West Michigan, we have a high concentration of many industries, health, manufacturing, and of course high-tech companies,” said Kessentini. “The first questions are about security, privacy, ethics and bias. It’s not just about deploying tools. It’s about deploying them responsibly.”
Kessentini said the consortium will focus on training, research and community education, with a heavy emphasis on data privacy, cybersecurity and misinformation.
“There are many examples where AI systems were trained on data that wasn’t diverse,” he said. “That can lead to inaccurate results. That’s why testing and training are critical.”
The consortium will bring together faculty researchers, students, and industry leaders, with weekly meetings planned to develop guidance for using AI at scale.
The goal is to help companies validate AI outputs, clean and manage data, and identify bias before systems are put into real-world use, especially in high-risk industries like healthcare and manufacturing.
Some projects will involve software design, others will focus on creating public data sets that are reliably sourced, but anonymized for safe use, and many more are yet to be ideated.
Some projects will involve software design, others will focus on creating public data sets that are reliably sourced, but anonymized for safe use, and many more are yet to be ideated. (Abigail Taylor/WWMT)
The initiative is backed by $1,031,000 in federal support, through the Community Project Funding (CPF) process, resources that U.S. Representative Hillary Scholten (D-MI-03) said she advocated for among members of congress in Washington.
“West Michigan should be leading the way in how artificial intelligence is developed and used, and that starts with investing in people and institutions we trust,” said Rep. Scholten. “This funding will help GVSU bring together educators, industry, and public partners to build AI systems that are ethical, secure, and transparent while preparing students for good-paying jobs and strengthening our region’s economy. I’m proud to support this work and to continue delivering federal investments that ensure West Michigan remains at the forefront of responsible innovation.”
It’s important that AI is useful, but also safe…
GVSU also launched an online certificate portal that is open for community members interested in learning about ethical AI use, for free.
Kessentini said the training is for the general public to learn how to navigate the technology, including the risks and limitations.
“It’s important that AI is useful, but also safe,” said Edgar Cruz, master’s student with a badge in cybersecurity.
Cruz is currently researching how AI systems can be attacked or manipulated with poisoned data, specifically as it relates to vehicle-to-vehicle communication, where AI helps self-driving cars exchange information like speed and position.
“We want to ensure that the system is robust and safe,” he said. “Because obviously people are involved.”
Kessentini said the consortium is designed to be a public resource, not just an academic project.
Quarterly community meetings will be open to the public, and training materials are available online through the College of Computing website.
“This is innovation with purpose,” he said. “We want to start here in Grand Rapids, but we want to make a global impact.”
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